It’s the simple question with seemingly no simple answer: why aren't more people excellent?
Naylor Love reported this week they are cracking the $1 billion revenue mark. They are an old company that has never cracked a billion.
Naylor Love are in construction. Construction is apparently having, or has had, a hell of a time of it.
So how is it a business in a tough sector can be so outstandingly successful?
They put it down to being good at complex projects. They do those well, the reputation grows, the word-of-mouth spreads and so it goes.
The other day I discovered a coffee roaster made by a company called Kaffelogic. Their machine is made in New Zealand.
The sadness is they are one of a handful left that produce appliances of any sort in New Zealand. The thing is their machine is world class because the bulk of professionals who enter roasting competitions use that machine.
So what that means is we can produce appliances, but don’t. Mostly that will be price related but like wine, or kiwifruit, or salmon, it seems there is nothing stopping us producing in small numbers if it is at the top end.
The same way there is nothing stopping Naylor Love booming in an industry that isn't booming.
The same way I can name you any number of restaurants and cafes that are doing very nicely, thank you, in a sector that is, according to press releases, in a world of trouble.
The same way, as we heard just this week, that despite all the job market downturns and tough times, at no time did it get any easier to find great talent.
No shortage of people. Just a shortage of excellence.
There seems to be a pattern here.
It seems a truism that no matter what you are surrounded by, no matter what the circumstances are, excellence will always shine and do well.
That if you are good, or dare we suggest excellent, at what you do, there is always a place for you not just to participate, but to succeed and even excel, while those around you flounder and complain and blame their lot.
Excellence is your ticket to wherever it is you want to go.
Don’t tell anyone. Heaven forbid it catches on.
Mike Hosking is a New Zealand television and radio broadcaster. He currently hosts The Mike Hosking Breakfast show on NewstalkZB on weekday mornings - where this article was sourced.
So how is it a business in a tough sector can be so outstandingly successful?
They put it down to being good at complex projects. They do those well, the reputation grows, the word-of-mouth spreads and so it goes.
The other day I discovered a coffee roaster made by a company called Kaffelogic. Their machine is made in New Zealand.
The sadness is they are one of a handful left that produce appliances of any sort in New Zealand. The thing is their machine is world class because the bulk of professionals who enter roasting competitions use that machine.
So what that means is we can produce appliances, but don’t. Mostly that will be price related but like wine, or kiwifruit, or salmon, it seems there is nothing stopping us producing in small numbers if it is at the top end.
The same way there is nothing stopping Naylor Love booming in an industry that isn't booming.
The same way I can name you any number of restaurants and cafes that are doing very nicely, thank you, in a sector that is, according to press releases, in a world of trouble.
The same way, as we heard just this week, that despite all the job market downturns and tough times, at no time did it get any easier to find great talent.
No shortage of people. Just a shortage of excellence.
There seems to be a pattern here.
It seems a truism that no matter what you are surrounded by, no matter what the circumstances are, excellence will always shine and do well.
That if you are good, or dare we suggest excellent, at what you do, there is always a place for you not just to participate, but to succeed and even excel, while those around you flounder and complain and blame their lot.
Excellence is your ticket to wherever it is you want to go.
Don’t tell anyone. Heaven forbid it catches on.
Mike Hosking is a New Zealand television and radio broadcaster. He currently hosts The Mike Hosking Breakfast show on NewstalkZB on weekday mornings - where this article was sourced.

6 comments:
No, sorry. Being excellent does NOT protect people in NZ. Being excellent often makes someone a target for the mediocre, lazy, or misguided people around them. Look at the bullying throughout our nation. Look at the ethnic quotas for med school.
You seem to overlook Tall Poppy Syndrome. But it is still very much alive as a deep and vicious jealousy of anyone who is excellent at what they do, as if their excellence diminishes the rest of us.
Yes, excellence usually punished in NZ as are following the rules and being good citizens. "B" students surround themselves with 'C' students and do everything they can to force 'A' students to leave. Top management throughout all NZ sectors, Ministries, businesses, hospitals, universities etc is at such a mediocre level. Simply no Big Thinkers.
Sure you're allowed to excel, providing you're not a White sexually normal male in which case excellence turns you into an oppressor.
Hi Barend, It’s worse than that. White males are targets, yes. But so is anyone else who excels. Women, Indians, Chinese, Americans, Maori, …children even.
Interesting opinion piece but I don’t seem many facts or figures to back the claims around industry. Is Mike a journalist? This doesn’t look like journalism to me. My opinion is some are doing it rough and if we had a higher percentage of quality babies heading out into the world there would be a much better vibe around here.
Re Anon 8:55
12,857 induced abortions in 2019. (Stats no longer kept)
We are flushing our future as medical waste. We will simply never now who and what they may have become or achieved.
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